EXCLUSIVE
Orange Oak Bolete / Leccinum Aurantiacum - Organic Mushroom's Dry Mycelium
6.10 €
A couple of weeks ago it seemed that the mushroom year would be a lost one but bolete hunters could put their mushroom-searching urge to good use last week already. The first ceps, or king boletes.
-
Organic Orange Oak Bolete Mushroom's Dry Mycelium
A couple of weeks ago it seemed that the mushroom year would be a lost one but bolete hunters could put their mushroom-searching urge to good use last week already.
The first ceps, or king boletes, were riddled by mushroom maggots already before they appeared above ground, but fresh little ceps can easily be found along the paths in pine forests.
For enthusiasts we present the habitats of the very similar Leccinum boletes, currently there are more of them to be found than of ceps. Leccinum aurantiacum grows in broadleaf or mixed forests, and only near aspens.
The cap, with a felt-like surface, is coloured from orange to brick red, and the cap skin rxtends a little below the cap edge. The tubes on the underside of the cap are white, grey or yellowish. The stem of young mushrooms is white, with white scales, on older mushrooms the scales area already slightly coloured as the cap. A cut surface and also crushed spots slowly turn violet gray to black-brown –back at home the mushroom is not quite as beautiful as before.
The orange birch boletes too grow in broadleaf or mixed forests but only close to birches, where they can establish quite sizeable stands. The caps are slightly more yellow compared to the previous species, Leccinum aurantiacum. Note that the stem is white, with fine jet black scales. The cap turns pinkish-purple on touching or cutting, a cut area on the lower part of the stem can sometimes turn blue-green.
The foxy bolete we find in pine forests or mixed forests with pines; the mushrooms grow close to pines. The cap is fox-coloured, with a felt-like surface. The tubes on the underside are white, becoming grey with age. Stem white as are the scales on a young mushroom stem, later changing into reddish brown and on aging to almost black - such specimens are not worth picking.
The orange oak bolete is relatively rare but similar, and a good mushroom for eating. It grows in oak stands, in mixed forests with oaks and in parks, but only close to oaks. The cap is brownish orange, tubes cream-coloured. The scales on the white stem become dark brown on older specimens. A cut area on the foot gradually turns reddish, violet or bluish grey as do pinched surfaces.
Products Viewed Before
Product code: 13689
1.14 €
One of the most famous Hungarian hot pepper varieties, the plant is 45 cm in height, the fruits are round, tomato-shaped, up to 6 cm in diameter, the pulp is juicy, for fresh food, stuffing, drying.
Product code: 16169
2.00 €
Is an perennial plant, 100 cm high, with strongly branched stems. The flowers are small, collected in loose inflorescences, during flowering form a lush pink cloud.
Product code: 3808
3.00 €
Grow these famous flowers from Edelweiss seeds! Edelweiss is a favorite wildflower of the Swiss Alps, best suited to growing in a well-drained rock garden, mass ground cover planting, or alpine trough.
6.10 €
Oyster mushroom is distinguished by a fleshy, rounded cap, curved in the form of a shell, therefore it is also called oyster, the color of the cap, as the fungus grows, changes from dark gray to ash-gray, the leg is short, inconspicuous, solid.
